Child Is Father To The Man

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Child Is Father To The Man album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 63:55

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a classic

cdtv

This is still the best BS&T album to my ears

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Great Music!

driftways

The soundtrack to my high school years, this actually sounds better now. It's been years since I heard "I Can't Quit Her" - if you haven't heard it, download right now!

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Are You Kidding, Just Terrific!!!

isaacmusicman

Are you kidding me!? I was introduced to them six years ago, or so I thought. After hearing "Child Is Father To The Man", I realized I knew about them all along. I love Donny Hathaway's version of "I Love You More Than You'll Ever Know", but when I heard this one, I lost my mind! Even though this is considered POP music, it has to much soul and funk in it, which makes BS&T something special. The instrumental tracks are great too. Shy away from the "Greatest Hits" collection, BS&T are definatly album artist!!!

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Best BS&T

bobbeard53

This is one of the first 10 CD's I ever purchased. This is the best album and the first. Al Kooper is the force behind this band and although the other albums have David Clayton Thomas they lack Kooper's ability to turn most anything into Rock and Roll. The exception to that rule is the next album which still has Al's influences with an "overture" and an "underture".

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They Say All Music Guide

Child Is Father to the Man is keyboard player/singer/arranger Al Kooper’s finest work, an album on which he moves the folk-blues-rock amalgamation of the Blues Project into even wider pastures, taking in classical and jazz elements (including strings and horns), all without losing the pop essence that makes the hybrid work. This is one of the great albums of the eclectic post-Sgt. Pepper era of the late ’60s, a time when you could borrow styles from Greenwich Village contemporary folk to San Francisco acid rock and mix them into what seemed to have the potential to become a new American musical form. It’s Kooper’s bluesy songs, such as “I Love You More Than You’ll Ever Know” and “I Can’t Quit Her,” and his singing that are the primary focus, but the album is an aural delight; listen to the way the bass guitar interacts with the horns on “My Days Are Numbered” or the charming arrangement and Steve Katz’s vocal on Tim Buckley’s “Morning Glory.” Then Kooper sings Harry Nilsson’s “Without Her” over a delicate, jazzy backing with flügelhorn/alto saxophone interplay by Randy Brecker and Fred Lipsius. This is the sound of a group of virtuosos enjoying itself in the newly open possibilities of pop music. Maybe it couldn’t have lasted; anyway, it didn’t. [Columbia/Legacy's 2000 reissue adds three bonus tracks from their November 1967 audition: the instrumental "Refugee From Yuhupitz" and alternate versions of "I Love You More Than You'll Ever Know" and "The Modern Adventures of Plato, Diogenes and Freud."] – William Ruhlmann

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